By Danai Kupemba, ADDIS ABABA Ethiopia
Fighting has erupted in the historic Ethiopian town of Lalibela, as government forces and local militia have clashed, residents told our reporter.
Lalibela is home to 13th
Century churches that are registered as Unesco world heritage sites.
Fano, a militia in the
surrounding Amhara region, has been battling the army since it was ordered to
disband.
Government spokesperson
Legesse Tulu has disputed reports of violence in the city, according to Reuters
news agency.
But witnesses told the BBC
that fighting was intense and a plane due to land at the airport on Wednesday
morning failed to do so.
The Amhara region around
Lalibela has been a battleground between the Fano militia and the military for
several months.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's
government imposed a six-month state of emergency in early August to try to
stop the clashes.
This allowed the government to
regain control of major towns and cities including Lalibela which had been
seized by Fano.
Federal government forces and
the militia group were allies in the fight against Tigrayan forces from
northern Ethiopia, who launched a rebellion in 2020.
The conflict ended with the
signing of a peace accord last year between the federal
government and Tigrayan forces.
Tension then arose between
Fano and federal authorities when the government attempted to integrate the
group into the military.
Forces in Amhara say the
federal government's decision will prevent the region from providing armed
resistance to any future threat.
The Ethiopia Human Rights
Commission found that 3,000 people have fled their homes since the start of the
conflict.
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